New York Police Department’s top spokesperson, said the bomb squad gave the “all clear” around 5pm after examining the backpack left near the entrance to Niketown, a store in the building.

Vehicles pass by Trump Tower on Fifth Avenue in New York, Tuesday. Police hastily cleared the lobby of Trump Tower on Tuesday to investigate an unattended backpack, only to find that the bag contained children's toys.(AP)

A stray backpack was spotted on Tuesday outside the Trump Tower, which houses the residence and offices of the President-elect Donald Trump. Bomb squad technicians were scrambled for partial evacuation, who quickly determined that the unattended bag contained nothing harmful, just some children’s toys.

Video posted online showed people running through the Manhattan skyscraper’s public lobby as uniformed police officers waved them toward the exits.

Stephen Davis, the New York Police Department’s top spokesperson, said the bomb squad gave the “all clear” around 5pm after examining the backpack left near the entrance to Niketown, a store in the building.

President-elect Donald Trump lives in the tower and has his offices there, though he was at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida when the bag was discovered.

His newly appointed press secretary, Sean Spicer, tweeted that officials were “back to work” following the “false alarm.”

Shoppers and visitors to Trump’s namesake skyscraper described a chaotic scramble.

“It was hysteria,” said Andy Martin, a 16-year-old from the New York City suburb of Huntington. “Police were shouting and telling people to leave.”

Trump Tower, in addition to being the president-elect’s home and business headquarters, contains residences, restaurants, retail stores — and a lobby that by law is open to the public to visitors daily from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m.

Police receive about 42 reports every day of so-called suspicious packages, though that number can surge depending on current events. In the days after a pressure cooker bomb exploded earlier this year in New York City, police responded to more than 800 calls of “suspicious packages”.

Maria Beckford, visiting New York from her native London, was in Niketown with her 13-year-old son looking to buy a pair of soccer cleats when she said they were told to urgently leave the store.

“We actually had them in his hands but because of everything we just had to leave,” she said.